STATE OF NEW JERSEY v. HASSAN TODD (18-12-4130, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1872-19
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    HASSAN TODD, a/k/a
    ABDUAL TODD, JIHAD
    BEAL, JERMAINE COLEY,
    QUAMIR WILLIAMS and
    HAS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Argued December 15, 2021 – Decided September 1, 2022
    Before Judges Gilson, Gooden Brown and Gummer.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Essex County, Indictment No. 18-12-4130.
    Morgan A. Birck, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
    argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora,
    Public Defender, attorney; Morgan A. Birck, of counsel
    and on the briefs).
    Caitlinn Raimo, Special Deputy Attorney General/
    Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for
    respondent (Theodore N. Stephens II, Acting Essex
    County Prosecutor, attorney; Caitlinn Raimo, of
    counsel and on the brief).
    Appellant filed a pro se supplemental brief.
    PER CURIAM
    Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of first-degree murder,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1); second-degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-
    1(b)(1); second-degree unlawful possession of a weapon, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-
    5(b)(1); and second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a)(1). He was sentenced to an aggregate term of sixty-five
    years of imprisonment, subject to an eighty-five percent period of parole
    ineligibility pursuant to the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43 -7.2.
    The convictions stemmed from the fatal shooting of Elijah Roberts and
    wounding of Tyre Sorbino in front of a Newark pizzeria. Defendant was arrested
    after two witnesses identified him as the shooter from photo arrays. One of the
    eyewitnesses, Asya Thomas, Roberts's girlfriend, was with Roberts at the time
    of the shooting, and knew defendant. Detective Yolanda Holmes, the lead
    detective, secured surveillance footage of the shooting, interviewed the
    eyewitnesses, and obtained a search warrant for defendant's aunt's home. The
    search uncovered a jacket belonging to defendant that matched the one worn by
    A-1872-19
    2
    the shooter as depicted in the surveillance footage. At trial, both eyewitnesses
    testified, and Holmes narrated the surveillance footage, identifying defendant as
    the shooter three separate times and identifying the seized jacket as matching
    the one worn by defendant in the footage. No forensic evidence or weapon
    linking defendant to the crimes was presented to the jury.
    On appeal, in his counseled brief, defendant raises the following points
    for our consideration:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING A
    WADE[1] HEARING.
    POINT II
    THE JURY INSTRUCTION ON IDENTIFICATION,
    WHICH     OMITTED    AN    INSTRUCTION
    REGARDING       THE      NON-RECORDED
    CONVERSATION BETWEEN AN EYEWITNESS
    AND LAW ENFORCEMENT REGARDING THE
    PHOTO ARRAY PROCEDURE, DID NOT
    ADEQUATELY EXPLAIN THE RELEVANT
    FACTORS OF ASSESSING THE RELIABILITY OF
    THE OUT-OF-COURT IDENTIFICATIONS. (NOT
    RAISED BELOW).
    POINT III
    THE LEAD DETECTIVE GAVE IMPROPER LAY-
    WITNESS OPINION TESTIMONY AS TO CRUCIAL
    1
    United States v. Wade, 
    388 U.S. 218
     (1967).
    A-1872-19
    3
    IDENTIFICATION       DETAILS.        (NOT    RAISED
    BELOW).
    POINT IV
    THE SENTENCE IS EXCESSIVE AS THE TRIAL
    COURT FAILED TO FIND A MITIGATING
    FACTOR SUPPORTED BY CREDIBLE EVIDENCE
    IN THE RECORD.
    In a pro se supplemental brief, defendant makes the following arguments:
    POINT I
    THE     JURY     INSTRUCTIONS    W[ERE]
    INADEQUATE AND DEFECTIVE AND DENIED
    [DEFENDANT] HIS CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO
    A FAIR TRIAL.
    POINT II
    [DEFENDANT'S] CONVICTIONS SHOULD BE
    REVERSED BECAUSE [THE] PROSECUTOR
    IMPROPERLY INFLAMED THE JURY BY TRYING
    TO GET THE JURY TO SYMPATHIZE WITH THE
    VICTIM AS [O]PPOSED TO JUST ARGUING THE
    FACTS OF THE CASE.
    POINT III
    DEFENDANT'S CONVICTION SHOULD BE
    REVERSED BECAUSE THE IDENTIFICATION
    PROCEDURE WAS SUGGESTIVELY TAINTED BY
    THE STATE'S KEY WITNESS BEING TOLD TO
    REMEMBER THE PHOTO NUMBER THAT
    DEFENDANT WAS IN PRIOR TO VIEWING THE
    PHOTO ARRAY.
    A-1872-19
    4
    POINT IV
    [DEFENDANT'S] CONVICTIONS MUST BE
    REVERSED BECAUSE OF THE CUMULATIVE
    ERROR THAT OCCURRED DURING HIS TRIAL.
    Because of the impermissible lay opinion testimony of the lead detective, we
    reverse the convictions and remand for a new trial.
    I.
    After defendant's motion for a Wade hearing challenging the admissibility
    of Thomas's out-of-court identification was denied, a six-day jury trial was
    conducted in September 2019, during which the State produced twelve witnesses
    consisting of civilian and law enforcement witnesses, including the
    eyewitnesses, the surviving victim, a crime scene investigator, a ballistics and
    firearm identification expert, and the medical examiner. We glean these facts
    from the trial record.
    At approximately 5:45 p.m. on September 22, 2018, an argument occurred
    on Ridgewood Avenue in Newark between Roberts and another individual.
    Maryanne Pollard, who knew Roberts from the neighborhood, lived on
    Ridgewood Avenue and observed the argument from her front porch. Roberts
    called his girlfriend, Asya Thomas, who came to help calm Roberts down.
    Thomas and Roberts then walked down the block to Avon Avenue and turned
    A-1872-19
    5
    the corner toward the Brick City Oven pizzeria, at which point Pollard lost sight
    of them.
    A few minutes later, Pollard saw a truck pull up with four people inside.
    The driver handed the front seat passenger a bag containing a gun, and the
    passenger, who was wearing a black hooded coat, walked towards the pizzeria.
    Thomas and Roberts were talking with friends, including Sorbino, in front of
    the pizzeria when the shooter approached them and shot Roberts in the chest.
    The gathering immediately dispersed. While hiding behind a wall, Thomas
    looked out and saw Roberts laying on the pavement as the shooter stood over
    him and continued to shoot. The shooter eventually retreated behind a parked
    car, still shooting at Roberts before fleeing.
    Once the shooting stopped, Thomas ran to Roberts, but he was
    unresponsive. Police were alerted by 911 calls and ShotSpotter,2 and responded
    along with paramedics.       Roberts was later pronounced dead at University
    Hospital from "[m]ultiple gunshot wounds," having been shot a total of fifteen
    times. Sorbino, who had been shot in the leg, was treated at the hospital and
    released. Although Sorbino saw a "black hoodie" prior to the shooting, he could
    not identify the shooter.
    2
    The ShotSpotter system alerts officers to a location where shots were fired.
    A-1872-19
    6
    Detective Yolanda Holmes responded to the scene half an hour after the
    shooting occurred. Holmes served as the lead detective and, in that capacity,
    observed the scene, interviewed witnesses, and canvassed the neighborhood for
    surveillance cameras. After locating surveillance cameras, Holmes viewed and
    downloaded the footage that depicted the shooting as well as the shooter's initial
    flight. During the investigation, Holmes reviewed the footage multiple times.
    Holmes interviewed Thomas the evening of the shooting and obtained a
    nickname for the shooter, which Holmes matched to a "government" name.
    Thomas testified she was familiar with defendant from having seen him "a
    couple of times." However, when presented with her prior statement to police
    to refresh her recollection, Thomas acknowledged she had told police she had
    previously seen defendant "about ten times."
    Two days after the shooting, Holmes asked Thomas to participate in a
    recorded photo array identification procedure, which was conducted by a
    double-blind administrator.3 Nine days after the shooting, Holmes arranged for
    3
    A double-blind administrator is one who does not know who the suspect is or
    where the suspect's photograph is positioned in the photo array. State v.
    Henderson, 
    208 N.J. 208
    , 248 (2011). The double-blind best practice
    established in Henderson reduces the possibility that the officer who is
    administering the identification procedure will suggest to the witness, even
    unconsciously, which photo in the array depicts the suspect. 
    Id. at 248-49
    .
    A-1872-19
    7
    Pollard to be administered a recorded double-blind photo array identification
    procedure. Thomas and Pollard each identified defendant as the shooter from
    the photo arrays presented to them. Holmes had compiled the photo arrays so
    that all six photos in each array depicted men with tattoos on their faces, similar
    to defendant's.
    After Thomas's identification, Holmes obtained a search warrant for
    defendant's aunt's house. During the execution, officers found "a black jacket
    with a hood" in one of the bedrooms. Defendant's aunt indicated that the jacket
    belonged to defendant. Holmes believed that the jacket matched the one she had
    observed in the surveillance footage. After Pollard's identification, defendant
    was arrested.
    At trial, the surveillance footage was played for the jury, with Holmes
    narrating what it depicted.       On three separate occasions during cross-
    examination, Holmes referred to the shooter in the video by defendant's first and
    last name, "Hassan Todd." Holmes also testified on direct examination that the
    jacket seized from defendant's aunt's home was "the same jacket . . . depicted in
    the surveillance video" "worn by Hassan Todd." The jacket was never tested
    for DNA or gunshot residue and although law enforcement recovered eight shell
    casings from the scene that were fired from the same gun, the gun used in the
    A-1872-19
    8
    shooting was never recovered. Additionally, no fingerprints were found at the
    scene, either on recovered shell casings or parked vehicles.
    After the jury returned its verdict, defendant was sentenced to a term of
    sixty-five years' imprisonment, subject to NERA, on the murder conviction; a
    concurrent ten-year term, subject to NERA, on the aggravated assault
    conviction; and a concurrent ten-year term, with a five-year period of parole
    ineligibility, each on the weapons offenses.     A memorializing judgment of
    conviction was entered on December 5, 2019, and this appeal followed.
    II.
    In Point III of his counseled brief, defendant argues the lead detective
    offered "impermissible lay-opinion testimony" which "improperly invaded the
    jury's role as ultimate fact-finder." According to defendant, "Holmes's opinion"
    of "whether [defendant] was the shooter in the video and whether the coat in the
    video was the same as the one recovered from [defendant's aunt's] house"
    "strayed far beyond the bounds of proper fact testimony by a police officer" and
    improperly bolstered Thomas's and Pollard's identification testimony.
    Because defendant did not object at trial, we apply a plain error standard
    of review and will reverse only if the errors were "clearly capable of producing
    an unjust result." R. 2:10-2; see also State v. R.K., 
    220 N.J. 444
    , 456 (2015)
    A-1872-19
    9
    (explaining an "error will be disregarded unless a reasonable doubt has been
    raised whether the jury came to a result that it otherwise might not have
    reached"). We also recognize that "[a] trial court's evidentiary rulings are
    entitled to deference absent a showing of an abuse of discretion, i.e., there has
    been a clear error of judgment." State v. Nantambu, 
    221 N.J. 390
    , 402 (2015)
    (quoting State v. Harris, 
    209 N.J. 431
    , 439 (2012)).
    When the issue has arisen of what is and what is not permissible narration
    of video footage that captures an incident not witnessed in real time, the question
    has focused on whether a specific comment by the narrator is purely factual or
    is a lay opinion. See State v. Singh, 
    245 N.J. 1
    , 14-15 (2021). Accordingly, the
    Court has evaluated the admissibility of narration testimony under N.J.R.E. 701.
    See State v. Sanchez, 
    247 N.J. 450
    , 466 (2021); Singh, 245 N.J. at 14; see also
    State v. Lazo, 
    209 N.J. 9
    , 20-24 (2012).
    In Singh, the Court squarely addressed lay opinion testimony relating to
    video surveillance recordings.     245 N.J. at 4.    The defendant in that case
    challenged testimony from a detective who had twice referred to the person
    shown in the surveillance video as "the defendant." Id. at 18. The detective
    further commented that the sneakers worn by the suspect in the surveillance
    A-1872-19
    10
    video looked like sneakers found on defendant the night he was arrested. Id. at
    19.
    The Court began its analysis by examining the purpose and boundaries of
    N.J.R.E. 701, which provides:
    If a witness is not testifying as an expert, the witness'
    testimony in the form of opinions or inferences may be
    admitted if it:
    (a) is rationally based on the witness' perception; and
    (b) will assist in understanding the witness' testimony
    or determining a fact in issue.
    The Court in Singh determined that it was error for the trial court to allow
    the detective to refer to the suspect in the video as "the defendant" but ultimately
    concluded that those fleeting references were harmless. Id. at 17. The Court
    also concluded that there was no error in allowing the detective to testify that
    the sneakers he saw in the video were like the sneakers the defendant had been
    wearing on the night he was arrested. Id. at 17-19. The Court reasoned that
    although "the jury may have been able [on its own] to evaluate whether the
    sneakers were similar to those in the video[, that] does not mean that [the
    detective's] testimony was unhelpful. Nor does it mean that [the detective's]
    testimony usurped the jury's role in comparing the sneakers." Id. at 20.
    A-1872-19
    11
    In Sanchez, the Court focused on whether a parole officer could offer a
    lay opinion identifying the defendant as a suspect in a still-frame image taken
    from a surveillance video. 247 N.J. at 458. Specifically, the Court considered
    whether it was an improper lay opinion for a "parole officer, who had met with
    [the] defendant more than thirty times as she supervised him on parole, [to tell]
    a detective investigating a homicide and robbery that [the] defendant was the
    individual depicted in a photograph derived from surveillance video taken
    shortly after the crimes." Ibid.
    In analyzing that issue, the Court compiled a non-exhaustive list of four
    factors to consider in determining whether lay opinion testimony will assist the
    jury in a case. Id. at 473. Those factors include (1) "the nature, duration, and
    timing of the witness's contacts with the defendant"; (2) "if there has been a
    change in the defendant's appearance since the offense at issue"; (3) " 'whether
    there are additional witnesses available to identify the defendant at trial '"; and
    (4) "the quality of the photograph or video recording at issue." Id. at 470-73
    (quoting Lazo, 
    209 N.J. at 23
    ). The Court stressed that no single factor will be
    dispositive. 
    Id.
     at 473-74 (citing Lazo, 
    209 N.J. at 20-24
    ). The Court in Sanchez
    ultimately determined that the parole officer's testimony was based on her
    A-1872-19
    12
    perceptions of having met with the defendant more than thirty times and,
    therefore, her testimony was admissible and helpful to the jury. Id. at 475.
    Although Lazo did not involve narration of surveillance video footage, the
    Court considered "whether it was proper for a [detective] to testify at trial about
    how and why he assembled a photo array" which he showed "to the robbery
    victim, whose eyewitness identification was the only evidence linking defendant
    to the offense." 209 N.J. at 12. The Court held that the detective's opinion that
    defendant's arrest photo was included in the array because it "closely resembled
    a composite sketch of the assailant" could not "pass muster under Rule 701." Id.
    at 24. The Court reasoned that the detective "had not witnessed the crime and
    did not know defendant," and the detective's opinion "was not based on prior
    knowledge" but "stemmed entirely from the victim's description." Ibid.
    The Court further expounded that there was no "change in appearance that
    the officer could help clarify for the jurors" who "could have compared the photo
    and the sketch on their own."         Ibid.   The Court stressed that "[i]n an
    identification case, it is for the jury to decide whether an eyewitness credibly
    identified the defendant." Ibid. "Neither a police officer nor another witness
    may improperly bolster or vouch for an eyewitness' credibility and thus invade
    the jury's province." Ibid. The Court concluded that because the identification
    A-1872-19
    13
    was "the sole basis for defendant's conviction," the error in admitting the
    detective's testimony was not harmless and required reversal of defendant's
    conviction. Id. at 27.
    In State v. Watson, 
    472 N.J. Super. 381
    , 404-05 (App. Div. 2022), we
    recently considered the standard for determining if police video-narrated
    testimony was properly admitted. After reviewing New Jersey Supreme Court
    precedent, we held there is no categorical, per se rule that prohibits video
    narration testimony. 
    Id. at 445
    . "Rather, the critical fact-sensitive issue to be
    decided on a case-by-case, indeed, question-by-question basis is whether a
    specific narration comment is helpful to the jury and does not impermissibly
    express an opinion on guilt or on an ultimate issue for the jury to decide." 
    Ibid.
    In Watson, we distilled general principles related to lay witness opinion
    testimony and adapted those principles to the specific context of a "play-by-
    play" narration of video recordings. 
    Id. at 449-450
    . We recognized certain
    principles that were already clearly established. For example, we pointed out
    that existing case law made it "clear that it is impermissible for a police witness
    to testify at trial as to a defendant's guilt or an ultimate issue to be decided by
    the jury." 
    Id. at 458
    . "Relatedly, the law also is clear that there are significant
    restrictions on when a police witness may offer a lay opinion on whether
    A-1872-19
    14
    defendant is the person shown in a video recording or screenshot in cases where
    the identity of the culprit is at issue." 
    Ibid.
     We pointed out that an objective
    description of what is depicted in a video will generally be admissible, but
    subjective commentary needs to be carefully analyzed. 
    Id. at 463
    . In that regard,
    we drew "a fundamental distinction between narration testimony that objectively
    describes an action or image on the screen (e.g., the robber used his elbow to
    open the door) and narration testimony that comments on the factual or legal
    significance of that action or image (e.g., the robber was careful not to leave
    fingerprints)." 
    Id. at 462
    .
    The critical inquiry in defining the scope of permissible video-narration
    testimony is the second prong of N.J.R.E. 701: "whether the narration testimony
    would be helpful to the jury by shedding light on the determination of a disputed
    factual issue." 
    Id. at 464
    . "If the jury needs no assistance to fully understand
    the contents of the video, then narration commentary would tread upon the role
    of the jury under N.J.R.E. 701 analysis." 
    Ibid.
     Ultimately, in Watson, we
    identified six factors to guide trial courts in safeguarding the province of the
    jury from unwarranted intrusion by narration. 
    Id. at 466
    . Those factors include:
    (1) if the video-narration testimony would provide helpful background context;
    (2) if the testimony would explain the duration of the video and be focused on
    A-1872-19
    15
    isolated events or circumstances; (3) if a narrative comment would pertain to a
    fact in dispute; (4) if a narrative comment would be based on an inference or
    deduction supported by other facts in evidence; (5) the clarity and resolution of
    the video recording; and (6) whether the narration testimony would be helpful
    in focusing the jury's attention if a video is complex or contains distracting
    images. 
    Id. at 466-69
    .
    Here, for much of her testimony, Holmes referred to the individual
    depicted in the surveillance video and still-frame images from the video as "the
    shooter." However, on four separate occasions, Holmes identified the shooter
    in the surveillance video as defendant, "Hassan Todd."          First, when the
    prosecutor questioned Holmes about the black hooded jacket she seized while
    executing a warrant at defendant's aunt's house, the following ensued:
    [PROSECUTOR]: Okay, and how do you recognize
    that black jacket?
    [HOLMES]: That's the same jacket matching the
    description depicted in the surveillance video --
    [PROSECUTOR]: Okay, is that --
    [HOLMES]: -- worn by Hassan Todd.
    [PROSECUTOR]: Is that the jacket that you seized
    from [defendant's aunt's home]?
    [HOLMES]: Yes.
    A-1872-19
    16
    During cross-examination, when questioned about Thomas's location in
    relation to the shooter, while the surveillance video played, Holmes explained:
    [HOLMES]: [Thomas] stops, right behind this red sign
    right here. There's a . . . little corner. She stops there
    for a second and she looks at Hassan Todd.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Well --
    [HOLMES]: Then she continues running.
    When defense counsel continued to probe Holmes on Thomas's location
    in relation to the shooter, Holmes again responded: "when [Thomas] got to the
    top of MLK, Hassan Todd was still shooting." Later, still disagreeing with
    defense counsel's characterization of Thomas's ability to identify the shooter
    based on her location, Holmes noted:
    And keep in mind . . . Hassan Todd was not
    wearing the hood over his head when he approached the
    corner. When he . . . stopped shooting and was going
    back, running, that's when in the video you will see he
    [puts the hood up]. So everyone has a clear view of his
    face.
    Holmes's references to the shooter as "Hassan Todd" clearly constitutes
    impermissible lay opinion testimony. The testimony violates N.J.R.E. 701's
    prescriptions because Holmes's testimony that the shooter in the video was
    defendant was not "rationally based" on Holmes's own "perception" as N.J.R.E.
    701 requires. Holmes was not present at the scene when the shooting occurred,
    A-1872-19
    17
    did not witness the incident firsthand, and did not know defendant. Holmes first
    viewed the incident on surveillance footage afterwards. Critically, her opinion
    about the shooter's identity was not based on any prior knowledge of defendant
    but stemmed from Thomas's and Pollard's identification of defendant. As a
    result, Holmes's opinion testimony improperly bolstered the eyewitnesses'
    credibility and impermissibly expressed an opinion on the identity of the
    shooter. Holmes's testimony also failed to comport with N.J.R.E. 701 because
    the jury was just as competent as Holmes to form a conclusion about the identity
    of the shooter in the video. Given the absence of any evidence in the record of
    a change in appearance, the jury needed no assistance to determine whether the
    shooter in the video was in fact defendant and whether defendant wore the seized
    jacket in the footage. Holmes's testimony therefore invaded the province of the
    jury as the ultimate trier of fact.
    The Singh Court found that admission of two "fleeting" references to
    "defendant," which "appear[ed] to have resulted from a slip of the tongue" in
    narrating the surveillance video, did not amount to plain error. 245 N.J. at 18.
    Here, Holmes's references were neither fleeting nor a slip of the tongue. The
    Singh Court also determined that the "testimony regarding the sneakers was
    proper" because the detective "had first-hand knowledge of what the sneakers
    A-1872-19
    18
    looked like because he saw defendant wearing them on the night of his arrest."
    Id. at 5. Here, Holmes had no first-hand knowledge of defendant wearing the
    jacket.
    Because defendant did not object to the testimony, we must determine
    whether the errors were "clearly capable of producing an unjust result" to
    warrant reversal. R. 2:10-2. In deciding whether reversal was warranted in
    Singh, the Court evaluated "'the overall strength of the State's case.'" 245 N.J.
    at 13 (quoting State v. Sanchez-Medina, 
    231 N.J. 452
    , 468 (2018)). There, the
    officers apprehended the defendant shortly after the robbery occurred and
    observed defendant dropping a machete – the robbery weapon – and the robbery
    proceeds while fleeing. Id. at 18. Although the Court concluded that the error
    withstood plain error scrutiny given the "significant" "circumstantial evidence
    of the robber's identification," the Court stressed "that in similar narrative
    situations, a reference to 'defendant,' which can be interpreted to imply a
    defendant's guilt . . . should be avoided in favor of neutral, purely descriptive
    terminology such as 'the suspect' or 'a person.'" Ibid.
    Here, the State's case rested on Thomas's and Pollard's identifications and
    eyewitness testimony, the black jacket, and the surveillance footage. Notably,
    three of Holmes's four references to defendant as the shooter came during a
    A-1872-19
    19
    contentious back-and-forth with defense counsel about the ability of Thomas to
    obtain a clear view of the shooter. There was no weapon recovered, no forensic
    evidence, and no ballistics evidence tying defendant to the crime. As the judge
    noted, "[t]he identification of the person who shot the deceased is the crux of
    the case." Because the State's case hinged on identification, we are satisfied that
    the repeated improper bolstering of the credibility of the identification testimony
    by the lead detective assigned to investigate the case was clearly capable of
    producing an unjust result. R. 2:10-2. Thus, we are constrained to reverse the
    convictions and remand for a new trial.
    Based on our decision, we need not address defendant's remaining
    arguments.    However, for the sake of completeness, we briefly address
    defendant's contention that he was entitled to a Wade hearing based on Thomas's
    remarks during the photo identification procedure and law enforcement's failure
    to comply with Rule 3:11(c)(10) in conducting the identification procedure, both
    of which demonstrated suggestiveness that may have tainted the identification.
    It is undisputed that when she was first shown the photo array, Thomas
    exclaimed: "Oh God, they told me to remember the number of the picture." In
    admitting the identification testimony and denying defendant's request for a
    hearing, the trial judge acknowledged that the statement was "a little odd"
    A-1872-19
    20
    because "she was told to remember the number of one of the photos."
    Nonetheless, the judge concluded that the "statement in a vacuum does not, in
    this [c]ourt's estimation warrant a full hearing." The judge noted there was
    nothing "to suggest that [Thomas] was somehow told to identify a particular
    number, or a particular photo." Instead, in assessing the reliability of her
    identification testimony, the judge relied heavily on the fact that Thomas knew
    defendant.
    The double-blind administrator conducting the identification procedure
    did not ask Thomas to explain who she spoke to or why she was told to remember
    a number. At trial, Thomas confirmed that she had spoken to Holmes prior to
    the identification procedure. Holmes also testified that she spoke with Thomas
    about the procedure before her identification. Despite the clear showing that a
    conversation occurred between Thomas and Holmes about the identification
    procedure before it was administered, there was no recording or account of that
    interaction as prescribed under Rule 3:11(c)(10), requiring law enforcement
    officers to record "the identity of any individuals with whom the witness has
    spoken about the identification procedure, at any time before, during, or after
    the official identification procedure, and a detailed summary of what was said. "
    A-1872-19
    21
    The Henderson Court "held that when defendants can show some evidence
    of suggestiveness tied to a system variable, they are entitled to explore all
    relevant system and estimator variables at a pretrial hearing to try to challenge
    the admissibility of the identification." State v. Anthony, 
    237 N.J. 213
    , 226
    (2019) (citing Henderson, 
    208 N.J. at 288-93
    ).          In Anthony, the Court
    "modif[ied] the Henderson framework" to make clear that "a defendant will be
    entitled to a pretrial hearing on the admissibility of identification evidence
    if . . . Rule 3:11 [is] not followed and no electronic or contemporaneous,
    verbatim written recording of the identification procedure is prepared." 237 N.J.
    at 233. "[D]efendants need not offer proof of suggestiveness in order to obtain
    this remedy." State v. Guerino, 
    464 N.J. Super. 589
    , 619 (App. Div. 2020)
    (citing Anthony, 237 N.J. at 233-34). Law enforcement's inability to provide
    the information "should not deprive defendants of the opportunity to probe about
    suggestive behavior that may have tainted an identification." Anthony, 237 N.J.
    at 233.   Here, because Rule 3:11(c)(10) was not followed, we agree that
    defendant presented sufficient evidence to justify a Wade hearing. However,
    we express no view on the outcome of the hearing.
    Our disposition does not require us to address defendant's sentencing
    arguments.
    A-1872-19
    22
    Reversed and remanded for a new trial. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-1872-19
    23